|
|||
![]() |
Stoichiometric controls of mercury dilution by growth Abstract: Rapid growth could significantly reduce methylmercury (MeHg)
concentrations in aquatic organisms by causing a greater than proportional
gain in biomass relative to MeHg (somatic growth dilution). We hypothesized
that rapid growth from the consumption of high-quality algae, defined by algal
nutrient stoichiometry, reduces MeHg concentrations in zooplankton, a major
source of MeHg for lake fish. Using a MeHg radiotracer, we measured changes
in MeHg concentrations, growth and ingestion rates in juvenile Daphnia pulex
fed either high (C:P = 139) or low-quality (C:P = 1317) algae (Ankistrodesmus
falcatus) for 5 d. We estimated Daphnia steady-state MeHg concentrations, using
a biokinetic model parameterized with experimental rates. Daphnia MeHg assimilation
efficiencies ({approx}95%) and release rates (0.04 d-1) were unaffected by
algal nutrient quality. However, Daphnia growth rate was 3.5 times greater
when fed high-quality algae, resulting in pronounced somatic growth dilution.
Steady-state MeHg concentrations in Daphnia that consumed high-quality algae
were one-third those of Daphnia that consumed low-quality algae due to higher
growth and slightly lower ingestion rates. Our findings show that rapid growth
from high-quality food consumption can significantly reduce the accumulation
and trophic transfer of MeHg in freshwater food webs.
Karimi, R, Chen, CY, Pickhardt, PC, Fisher, NS, and Folt, CL. Stoichiometric controls of mercury dilution by growth. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 2007 104(18):7477-7482. |
||
|
|
|||